Tag Archives: Spring MVC

This is a final, third part of Spring MVC REST tutorial with CNVR. Here I will demonstrate how all that stuff works, which I have developed within first two parts. Here will be four sections for each type of CRUD operations: CREATE, READ, UPDATE, DELETE. As a pre-requirement you need to install any REST client for a working with a ...

In the previous post I have made a fast overview of the setting up environment for Spring MVC REST project with CNVR. In this part I can focus directly on a controller and on demonstration of a REST service. As usually I’m going to make a short introduction and after that I will go through the controller methods and explain ...

In this post i want to dig into spring mvc a little, revealing what happens behind the scenes when a request is converted to your parameter object and vice versa. Before we start, i want to explain the purpose of these annotations. What are @RequestBody and @ResponseBody for? They are annotations of the spring mvc framework and can be used ...

Not so long time ago I have read an article written by Paul Chapman about Content Negotiating View Resolver (CNVR). That post on a Spring Framework Blog inspired me to investigate this framework’s area. As a result I have developed a sample REST application based on Spring MVC with CNVR. The application demonstrates a basic flow of a REST service ...

The first blog in this mini-series introduced the Spring MVC Test Framework and demonstrated its use in unit testing Spring MVC Controller classes as controllers rather then as POJOs. It’s now time to talk about using the framework for integration testing. By ‘integration testing’ I mean loading the Spring context into the test environment so that the controller can work with ...

The first part of this tutorial described how we can configure our unit tests which use the Spring MVC Test framework. Now it is time to get our hands dirty and learn how we can write unit tests for “normal” controllers. The obvious next question is: What is a normal controller? Well, a normal controller (in the context of this ...

Newly promoted to the main Spring framework is the Spring MVC Test Framework, which the Guys at Spring claim is a “first class JUnit support for testing client and server side Spring MVC code through a fluent API”1. In this and my next blog, I’m going to take a look at Spring’s MVC Test Framework and apply it to some ...

Not so long time ago I wrote a post about HTTP sessions in a Spring MVC application. That was the simple article with an emphasis on practical aspect of usage. In the end of the post I promised to write more advanced topic dedicated to the sessions in Spring MVC applications. So I’m going to publish this stuff. Before I ...

Last tutorial, I showed how to validate a form using annotations. This works great for simple validations, but eventually, you’ll need to validate some custom rules that aren’t available in the out-of-the-box annotations. For example, what if you need to validate that a user is over 21 years old, calculated based off their input birthdate, or, maybe you need to ...

Now, this is the blog you want to read if you’re interested in creating a Spring MVC Webapp that uses Aspect Oriented Programming (AOP) in the form of Aspectj’s @Aspect and @Before annotations to audit a user’s visit to a screen. As I said in my last blog auditing a user’s visits to a screen is one of those few ...

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